Police praised the "swift action of witnesses" but urged the public to consider their safety after an angle grinder bike robber was confronted as he cut through a lock and injured in an "altercation", the offender now jailed for 33 months.
George Jhugroo pleaded guilty to charges of robbery and possession of an offensive weapon in a public place in relation to the incident on 28 May last year. He was seen using an angle grinder to cut through a lock and steal a Brompton worth £2,000 on Kings Road, near Cavendish Place, on Brighton's seafront.
The victim and several witnesses saw sparks flying as the 24-year-old from south London removed the lock and members of the public confronted the bike thief, demanding that he stop.
> Check out "the lightest angle grinder-resistant lock" infused with diamond
However, Jhugroo continued and became aggressive with those who had stepped in, threatening to assault them with the angle grinder before riding off in the direction of Norfolk Square.
Sussex Police explained that Jhugroo was injured in an altercation following the robbery and the bike was recovered.
Brighton and Hove News reports Jim Mortimore got his bike back after Jhugroo was "chased", "ended up in a scrap" and was "battered". Having gone to Royal Sussex County Hospital for treatment later that day, he was intercepted by police officers and arrested.
On February 5 he was charged with robbery and possession of an offensive weapon in a public place, charges he pleaded guilty to in April and was sentenced to 33 months imprisonment at Lewes Crown Court.
"The swift action of witnesses reporting crucial detail ensured that police were able to quickly apprehend Jhugroo," Detective Constable James Botting said. "We hope this sentence serves as a deterrent to others considering similar criminal activities. We are grateful to those who confronted Jhugroo, but we want to remind the public that their safety is paramount.
"If you witness a crime in progress, please act with caution and call 999 at the earliest opportunity. Your safety is more important than anything else."
There has been a concerning trend in recent times of bike thieves using angle grinders to easily cut through locks and steal bicycles, footage of incidents regularly appearing on social media and in the press.
> Organised crime gang sentenced for prolific thefts of more than £100,000 worth of bikes
Last May, we reported the case involving a 70-year-old London cyclist who managed to fight off a gang of blacked-out bike thieves armed with an angle grinder who attempted to steal his Brompton outside a cafe in broad daylight.
Of course the more common angle grinder theft cases are those involving a lock being cut through. The footage of one such case, filmed outside a busy shopping centre in Surrey Quays, went viral in the autumn of 2021, thieves seen using an angle grinder to steal a Trek bicycle as crowds of shoppers watched on.
The following June, Helen Hayes, the Labour MP for Dulwich and West Norwood almost had her bike taken by an angle grinder bike thief. Fortunately staff working at a nearby restaurant saw what was happening and the suspect fled.
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28 comments
Reality check on police statement "If you witness a crime in progress, please act with caution and call 999 at the earliest opportunity. Your safety is more important than anything else."
"Emergency Services? Yes, I'm witnessing a crime taking place"
"What is the nature of the crime?"
"A bicycle is being stolen"
"All our officers are chasing illegal drug users/supporting community services/doing paperwork right now. I'll try to get an officer there next week"
"But cycle theft helps fund organised crime by £millions a year in the UK!"
"I hear what you are saying sir, but we have to prioritise crime and this is the lowest. At least another cyclist is off the roads hey! Good day."
"ok, if you're not going to attend I'll just shoot the bastard with my shotgun, can you send an ambulance instead of a police car?"
20 seconds later a full armed response team arrives.
Jhugroo... Beautiful British name.
You have to be a WASP to be British then?
A bit of a racist comment.
What about us Celts?
Bit of a racist comment 😜
if you didnt catch it the first time. It was a quote by Al Murray - aka, The Pub Landlord
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vD0Dyz4XQHs
He is well worth the watch unless youre the sort of person that gets offended by just about everything.
It's pronounced "Cholmondley-Warner".
As noted - no serious Brompton owner locks the bike up outside at all
Staggeringly I see this increasingly though
No suprise but I suspect the world will catch up
I always take bikes inside almost every large 'shed' store I visit when shopping - never carry a lock
Exactly. Never had an issue with security or staff doing this.
I thought that was the whole point of a Brompton. Why suffer one otherwise?
Trains.
(But I agree, I take mine in with me. But then I almost never leave any bike locked outside anyway.)
A colleague of mine managed to grasp his Brompton just and wrestle it off a thief after an attempt to steal it from a train carriage. I've never really asked him but given what I've seen on London trains folks put them in the luggage racks near the doors and sit down in the carriage and on crowded trains that's about the only space sometimes, I wonder if he done the same. If a seat isn't available next to my full size bike I stand next to it instead.
I always try (and usually manage) to sit next to the luggage rack mine's on, but even so I have thought I should put a basic cable lock on it.
The point where it said he was " battered" brought a big grin on my face and a decent sentence to boot 👍
Me too, I shouldn't condone violence or revenge attacks but....
Five stars for the people who challenged him, the police who captured him, and the courts that "put him away" for nearly three years. Bike theft can be rampant but, as I learned as a San Jose (CA) police officer, something like 80 percent of stolen bicycles weren't locked . . . at all! Even a cheap cable lock would have prevented a huge percentage of bicycle thefts.
Not the case in the UK, or certainly not London at least, virtually nobody leaves their bike unlocked here. Thinking back over the sadly extensive range of bicycles friends and I have had stolen over the years, I can think of only one example of an unlocked bike being stolen, a friend who went back inside her house to get her forgotten phone leaving her bike leaning on the doorpost whence an opportunist passing thief lifted it. Inadequate locks and/or inadequate stands are definitely a problem, leaving bikes completely unlocked not so much, I would say.
I had to re-read that, having missed 'had' from that specific passage!
A great result.
And now I know this is victim blaming - and I apologise for that - but isn't the whole point of a Brompton that you fold it up and take it with you, rather than lock it up and risk it being nicked?
Not necessarily, someone may has small house, has to put in trains or buses full of people etc.
Regarding the stealing part, you can get a £150 used bicycle and D-lock that rides way better than a £2000 brand new Brompton, and since I believe that it is unlikely to have lost 13 bicycles to theft, theft prevention is not the key selling point of Brompton.
True, I regularly forget my lock at home and my 25 years old bike - unbranded frame, cheap RX-100 groupset - has not been stolen yet... I wouldn't leave it out unlocked for the night, though, some inebriated youth might need it to ride home, or throw it into the river!
Not sure it rides "way better" than a brand new Brompton, but at least it has full sized wheels
I didn't realise bromptons were THAT bad
Anything I have ridden with small wheels seemed horrible to me. In a recent nice article https://road.cc/content/feature/fastest-way-commute-bike-swytch-commutin... a great bike cost used just £100
You are confusing "rides better" with "rides differently". The majority of the funny feeling from a Brompton or indeed any similar folder is the directness of the steering due to effectively not having a stem. It takes less than a week to get used to it.
I'm sure that is often a benefit. However, I can also imagine it's not always practical or convenient.
We know nothing about the bike's owner or what he was doing that day, but given this occurred on a Sunday in late May, it's perfectly plausible he was enjoying a day out and didn't want to carry around >10kg of bike with him whilst ambling along the promenade or perusing Brighton's selection of shops.
My Brompton-riding mate locks his up outside the pub when it's busy because it's quite an unwieldy package to be carrying into a crowded space, plus if he's the first there he'll have to carry it with him when queueing at the bar - pretty awkward if you're buying more than one drink - visiting the lavatories et cetera or leave it at the table and risk someone pinching it from inside.
Excellent. Reasonable jail term and sounds like some people beat the snot out of him for extra bonus points. Nice to hear the occasional uplifting story when it comes to bike theft.